RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.

1,985 results for "the Hum" — page 82 of 100

Q_3_07 Cosmology & Physics

Q_3_07 — Plasma Cosmology and the Electric Universe Hypothesis

Plasma cosmology and its populist extension, the Electric Universe (EU) hypothesis, propose that electromagnetic forces — rather than gravity — are the dominant organizing force in the cosmos, and that plasma (ionized ga

plasma cosmology electric universe EU plasma Alfvén Birkeland
Q_3_04 Cosmology & Physics

Q_3_04 — Gravitational Lensing: Bending Light and Mapping the Invisible Universe

Gravitational lensing — the bending of light by massive objects predicted by Einstein's general relativity — has become one of the most powerful observational tools in modern astrophysics. First confirmed during the 1919

gravitational lensing strong lensing weak lensing microlensing Einstein rings Einstein cross

AI Hallucination and the Consciousness Filter — A Cross-Disciplinary Connection Map

Both brains and large language models run the same basic operation: generate a prediction, then check it against a constraint. In brains, the constraint is sensory evidence, and Anil Seth calls the result a "controlled h

AI hallucination consciousness filter IIT predictive coding controlled hallucination Anil Seth
Verified

INTERDOC_47 — Islamic Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against the Muslim World

Suppression events in this timeline are categorized by mechanism: S-active (deliberate targeted action by an identifiable actor — book burnings, executions, physical destruction), S-structural (institutional gatekeeping

Islam suppression iconoclasm Quran standardization Uthman Nalanda
Verified

INTERDOC_46 — Christian Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline from the Church Fathers to the Modern Era

Christian institutional suppression operated through six interconnected mechanisms across 19 centuries: (1) Canon formation and text destruction — defining which texts were "scripture" and systematically destroying all o

Christianity suppression persecution heresy Inquisition witch trials

YOUNGER_DRYAS_SYNTHESIS

ZB_2_04 Ecology & Biology

ZB_2_04 — Circadian Rhythms, Biological Clocks, and the Ancient Time-Keeping Body

Every cell in the human body keeps time. The circadian system — a ~24-hour internal clock governed by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus — orchestrates sleep-wake cycles, hormone secretion, body temper

circadian rhythms biological clock SCN suprachiasmatic nucleus melatonin pineal gland
ZB_2_05 Ecology & Biology

ZB_2_05 — Aging, Longevity, and the Biology of Death

Why do organisms age and die? This question — one of the oldest in human inquiry — has yielded remarkable molecular answers in recent decades. Leonard Hayflick's 1961 discovery that human cells have a finite replicative

aging longevity telomeres telomerase Hayflick limit senescence
ZB_5_26 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_26 — Mycorrhizal Networks: The Wood Wide Web and Underground Intelligence

Mycorrhizal networks — underground fungal hyphal systems that connect the roots of multiple plants — represent one of the most significant ecological discoveries of the past three decades. Suzanne Simard (University of B

mycorrhizal networks wood wide web fungal symbiosis common mycorrhizal network ectomycorrhiza arbuscular mycorrhiza
ZB_5_11 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_11 — Chemical Ecology: The Language of Molecules

Chemical ecology investigates the role of naturally produced chemical compounds — allelochemicals, pheromones, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and secondary metabolites — in mediating interactions between organisms, e

chemical ecology allelochemical plant defense pheromone volatile organic compound herbivore-plant coevolution
ZB_5_30 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_5_30 — Phosphorus Cycle: Biogeochemistry, Eutrophication, and the Coming Scarcity Crisis

Phosphorus (P) is the rate-limiting nutrient for life on Earth — essential to DNA, RNA, ATP (the universal energy currency), cell membranes (phospholipids), and bone (hydroxyapatite), yet available in nature only through

phosphorus cycle phosphorus scarcity peak phosphorus eutrophication biogeochemistry fertilizer
ZB_4_09 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_4_09 — Canopy Ecology: Life in the Forest Roof

The forest canopy — the aggregate of tree crowns forming the uppermost vegetative layer of a forest — is among the most species-rich, least explored, and most ecologically dynamic habitats on Earth, harboring an estimate

canopy ecology forest canopy epiphyte arboreal vertical stratification emergent layer
ZB_4_15 Credible Ecology & Biology

ZB_4_15 — Urban Wildlife Genomics: Rapid Evolution in the Anthropocene City

Cities — covering only ~3% of Earth's land surface but housing >55% of humanity — are emerging as powerful natural laboratories for studying rapid evolution in real time. Urban wildlife genomics investigates how the extr

urban-evolution wildlife-genomics urban-adaptation heat-island pollution-adaptation urban-speciation
ZB_4_05 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_4_05 — Urban Ecology: Nature in the City

Urban ecology studies the distribution, abundance, and interactions of organisms within cities and urbanized landscapes — environments that now house over 56% of humanity (projected ~68% by 2050) and cover ~3% of Earth's

urban ecology urban heat island habitat fragmentation synurbization novel ecosystems urban biodiversity
ZB_3_13 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_3_13 — Estuary and Mangrove Ecology: Where Rivers Meet the Sea

Estuaries — semi-enclosed coastal water bodies where freshwater river discharge meets and mixes with saline ocean water — and mangrove forests — tropical and subtropical intertidal forests dominated by salt-tolerant tree

estuary mangrove salt marsh salinity gradient nursery habitat blue carbon
ZB_3_12 Verified Ecology & Biology

ZB_3_12 — Soil Ecology: The Living Skin of the Earth

Soil — far from inert dirt — is the most biologically diverse habitat on Earth, containing an estimated 25–30% of all species on the planet. A single gram of healthy soil harbors approximately 1 billion bacteria (from 10

soil ecology soil microbiome mycorrhizae decomposition soil food web earthworms
ZC_3_16 Verified Social Science

ZC_3_16 — The Gig Economy: Labor, Platforms, and Precarity

The gig economy — defined as a labor market characterized by short-term, task-based, platform-mediated work rather than permanent employment — has grown from a marginal phenomenon to a significant sector of advanced econ

gig economy platform labor Uber precarious work independent contractor algorithmic management
ZC_3_18 Credible Social Science

ZC_3_18 — Surveillance Capitalism and the Digital Economy

Surveillance capitalism — a term coined by Shoshana Zuboff (Harvard Business School, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, 2019) — describes an economic system in which human experience is unilaterally claimed as free raw

surveillance-capitalism data-extraction behavioral-surplus attention-economy platform-monopoly algorithmic-governance
ZC_5_22 Verified Social Science

ZC_5_22 — Māori Culture: Whakapapa, Mana, and the Living Knowledge of Aotearoa

The Māori — the indigenous Polynesian people of Aotearoa (New Zealand) — developed one of the most sophisticated oral-knowledge civilizations in human history during approximately 700 years of isolation following their a

māori aotearoa new zealand whakapapa mana tikanga
ZC_5_14 Verified Social Science

ZC_5_14 — Sociology of Incarceration: Mass Imprisonment, the Carceral State, and Abolition

The sociology of incarceration examines imprisonment as a social institution — analyzing its functions, history, racial and class dimensions, effects on individuals and communities, and its relationship to broader struct

mass incarceration prison carceral state Foucault prison-industrial complex racial disparities